Drawing Session with Sarah Casey on Saturday 12 November 2022 at Drawing Projects UK

Join a Drawing Session with Sarah Casey on Saturday 12 November from 2pm to 4pm. This Drawing Session will be held in-person at Drawing Projects UK in association with Sarah Casey's solo exhibition - Emergency! - which opens on 12 November 2022.

This Drawing Session will introduce the idea of floating drawings, using techniques of cutting and ripping paper to draw, assembling compositions to be ‘frozen’ or trapped between sheets of waxed paper. It introduces participants to the principles of drawing used by Sarah Casey in the Emergency! exhibition.

Participants are encouraged to bring their own paper fragments to recycle into drawing –e.g. old artworks, found paper – whatever you fancy.  Other materials will be provided. 

The Drawing Session is free to attend and tickets may be booked here. Places are limited for this event, so please only book a place if you will be joining this practical Drawing Session, which will take place in the Project Space at Drawing Projects UK in Wiltshire. A programme of online Drawing Discussions and Drawing Sessions will accompany the exhibition too. 

Emergency! is an exhibition of new work by Sarah Casey developed in response to glacial archaeology. In 2018, at Valais Museums, Switzerland, Sarah began drawing artefacts that have emerged from alpine glaciers as the ice in which they have been preserved for 50, 500 or 5000 years is now melting at unprecedented rates. This glacial archaeology embodies a position of extreme precarity: these rare and valuable finds preserve important knowledge about the human past, yet insight comes at the cost of environmental change and threatened futures. Moreover, the artefacts themselves, once released from their frozen slumber, will rapidly decay and disintegrate when exposed. The Emergency! exhibition aims to explore this precarity asking how might processes of drawing – with its use of marking and erasure, presence and absence – negotiate these tensions and find new ways of thinking through loss and change? The drawings in the exhibition are made by trapping dust in wax and so, like the archaeology they depict, are contingent on their environmental conditions to survive – if they get exposed to heat, they will melt away. This research was developed through a Henry Moore Institute Research Fellowship 2021 and undertaken in dialogue with Valais History Museum, Switzerland. The exhibition is kindly supported by Lancaster University and Arts Council England. 

Sarah Casey is a visual artist and researcher working at the cusp of drawing and sculpture. Her drawings exploring the limits of visibility and material existence arise from working alongside researchers from other fields, ranging from archaeology to astrophysics. Solo exhibitions of her work have been at Kensington Palace, The Bowes Museum and most recently at Ryerson University, Toronto. She also writes on drawing and is co-author of Drawing Investigations: graphic relationships with science, culture and environment (Bloomsbury 2020). She is Senior Lecturer in Drawing and Installation at Lancaster University, UK where she is Director for the School of Fine Art. Sarah was a Royal Drawing School Scottish artist-in-residence in 2020 and a Visiting Research Fellow at The Henry Moore Institute from 2020-21. Her current work explores the provocations of glacial archaeology. With Rebecca Birch and Jen Southern she is co-founder of the Rocky Climates network bringing together artists concerned with the mobilities and temporal, spatial, cultural instabilities of landscapes in uncertain times.

The exhibition and public programmes are supported by Arts Council England.